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Reappearance of circulating heparin in whole blood heparin concentration-based management does not correlate with postoperative bleeding after cardiac surgery

Authors :
Mitsuharu Kodaka
Yuji Hirasaki
Junko Ichikawa
Makiko Komori
Makoto Ozaki
Keiko Nishiyama
Source :
Journal of cardiothoracic and vascular anesthesia. 28(4)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Objective The Hepcon Heparin Management System (HMS) facilitates administration of higher heparin and lower protamine doses, which may affect bleeding potential due to heparin rebound. The present study evaluated heparin rebound in patients for whom the Hepcon HMS was used to determine whether point-of-care tests detect residual heparin and residual heparin is associated with postoperative blood loss. Design Prospective study. Setting Tertiary care center affiliated with a university hospital. Participants Adults undergoing elective cardiac surgery requiring cardiopulmonary bypass. Interventions In blood samples obtained at baseline, at 2 minutes, and at 1, 2, 4, 6, and 24 hours after heparin neutralization, heparin concentrations were measured using an automated chromogenic assay. Activated coagulation time (ACT), activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT), and thromboelastometry 2 hours after heparin neutralization also were examined in the last 22 study patients enrolled. Measurements and Main Results All 31 patients had measurable heparin levels 2 hours after protamine administration; 22 patients exhibited a primary failure to reverse heparin after protamine administration, and 9 patients had measureable heparin levels 2 hours after complete heparin reversal (ie, heparin rebound). The thromboelastometric variable, INTEM-CT:HEPTEM-CT ratio, correlated with heparin concentration (r = 0.72), but ACT (r = –0.12), APTT (r = 0.36), and whole blood heparin concentration, determined using the Hepcon HMS, did not. Peak heparin concentration (0.18±0.07 U/mL) at 4 hours was not correlated with mediastinal blood loss. Conclusion Circulating heparin detected by the chromogenic assay was too low to be clinically significant based on postoperative bleeding, although all 31 patients had residual heparin or heparin rebound at 2 hours after protamine administration with use of the Hepcon HMS.

Details

ISSN :
15328422
Volume :
28
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of cardiothoracic and vascular anesthesia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3774f57032076ce55f1c99da616c0362